70 ,;:t {1 *" " J' ,.j.!.t !:W":" , "(-=:;<:":" ,::., ,, ç&: : . . .: . .: \ :;: ::"};,' ::::.:. f % àit , f " . :-:::. : : , ':# , :'^": , /' "., ':,." 4-, .. ;t:r . . ; ,{{??." ::... ,."'...:" Pin-up pidure for the man who "can't afford" to buy an extra War Bond! Y OU'VE HEARD PEOPLE SAY: "I can't afford to buy an extra War Bond." Perhaps you've said it yourself. . . with- out realizing what a ridiculous thing it is to say to men who are dying. Yet it is ridiculous, when you think about it. Because today, with national income at an all-time record high . . . with people making more money than ever before. .. . with less and less of things to spend money for. . . practically every one of us has extra dollars in his pocket. The very least that you can do is to buy an extra $100 War Bond. . . above and beyond the Bonds you are now buy- ing or had planned to buy. In fact, if you take stock of your resources, you will probably find that you can buy an extra $200 . . " or $300 ... . or even $500 worth of War Bonds. Sounds like more than you "can af- ford"? Well, young soldiers can't afford to die, either . . . yet they do it when called upon. So is it too much to ask of us that we invest more of our money in War Bonds. . . the best investment in the world today? Is that too much to ask? WE BOUGHr . WAR BONDS . . TIJ Let's All * * WAR lOAN BACK THE ATTACK! less. \, ergeles was let off with a warn- ing, and at the moment an armed truce exists between him and the State Com- mISSIon, which outnumbers him three to one. T HE exit speech delivered by Bill Terry) former manager of the New York Giants, as he departed from baseball and went into the cotton busi- ness, was met by a number of snarls from the sportswriters, who have never loved him. Terry said that the sport was too cheap for him, by which he presum- ably meant that he saw no prospect of getting paid what he thought he was worth and could probably make more money trying to outguess the boll weevil than the Brooklyn Dodgers. He ex- pressed his sentiment in his customary abrupt manner, and it was received by the press in that body's customary abrupt manner of receiving Terry's sentiments. The writers recalled that he had once described them as a bunch of thirty-fi ve- dollar-a-week punks, or words to that effect, and admitted that this estimate still rankled. They maintained that they had built him up and were owed a cer- tain amount of gratItude for his having become a forty-thousand-dollar-a-year punk in baseball. Actually, it was prob- ably Terry's ability that landed him in his lofty bracket, since the writers never said a pretty word about him, but it's true that he was rougher on them than he ought to have been on his fellow- men. One thing is certain, though. Sportswriters' opinions of him have nev- er meant anything to Terry, and there is no likelihood that they will start mean- ing anything to him now that he is out of range. A RADIO program to be held this Saturday night for the purpose of selling War Bonds will have on it, among others, Ruth, Sande, Dempsey, Leonard, Hoppe, Frisch, Grange, Budge, Alice Marble, and Sonja Henie. Man 0' War and John L. Sullivan ,weren't signed up, but you can't have everything. -D. L. . OBIT A farce of sleep, His body lies; No count of sheep Will shut those eyes; No conqueror's creed Will ease that head- Restless indeed The dog-tagged dead. -vV. vV. GIBSON CHELS f j(, \" A STANDARD OF ACCURACY SINCE 1886 '. ....".: ,.,{' This Chelsea Willard Banjo will be available as soon as this War is over. {'ir, : r :;: 1Ü '1,,\ Jj ',. 5 ., For war or peace.. Chelsea clock movements are identical; only the cases are changed. Thus, : :::; : , !t , .:"'::''': soon after this W ar is won, fine jewellers wIll be able to offer you famous prewar and attrac- tive new models of these excellent timepieces. =::....::..;-:.. \ \ "'''' " \ ft\ . -;' '" .... \ t 1 -NAVY Let's All BACK THE ATTACK! Buy 4th War Loan Bonds '1IItiL _ : .. To transient guests. . . Guests whose standards of comfort, atmosphere and service rise above the com- monplace will respond to the sense of well-being that awaits them at the Drake A limited n umber of transient accommodations promise to be available through the coming months, and reservations are invited. Distinguished restaurant; excellent room service. BING & BING Management w. w. Malle80n, Jr., Mg,.-. \ HOTEL *1 rak (I) NEW YORK 440 '}cMkÁvemu at 56th St., New York 22